its a giant hornet(no pun intended). Bees have lots of hair on their asses and defy the laws of physics by flying.Wasps look similiar to hornets but are much smaller.
Uh, hornets are a type of wasp unless I've missed something. It's not that wasps are similar but smaller, it's just that hornets are large wasps.
jellytastesgood89 said: Bees have lots of hair on their asses and defy the laws of physics by flying.
Nothing in reality defies the laws of physics, ever. If something "defies" it, then that just means our understanding of how it works hasn't reached a point of truly understanding it. In this case though we've already reached the point of understanding it, just people keep bringing up nonsense from the past that displays our own arrogance of how we once thought we understood it well enough to say it was impossible.
Normal-sized hornets don't go down even if you stamp on them (on soil, obviously not on hard floor). 300 of them is enough to raid a beehive of 30000 without a single loss (though some bees have strategies of their own, too).
Now bring in a hive of gigantic giant hornets, organized under Wriggle's control on top of it, now you have your zerg/tyranid/xenomorph/what-your-favorite-insect-like-aliens-are invasion.
NoelTouchdown said: We also have a firearms expert division, a military armored vehical expert divison, a military aircraft expert division, and a translations department
And life consultation department excelled in immortality.
HakaimaRan said: JESUS-H-CHRIST...... Where my trooper armor at?
Guess you didn't get the memo. The venom of just a normal sized hornet is capable of eating through flesh (also doesn't help that they can spray their venom as well as inject via sting) Now picture just how powerful that chemical could get if that very same hornet were the same size as the one hangin' with wriggle.
Lick_King said: Normal-sized hornets don't go down even if you stamp on them (on soil, obviously not on hard floor). 300 of them is enough to raid a beehive of 30000 without a single loss (though some bees have strategies of their own, too).
Hornets... ugh... I just have some bad experience with these guys, they easy to deal with but they won't stop as long they can bother you in a day... anyway that's past now...
maou_ashura said: Guess you didn't get the memo. The venom of just a normal sized hornet is capable of eating through flesh (also doesn't help that they can spray their venom as well as inject via sting) Now picture just how powerful that chemical could get if that very same hornet were the same size as the one hangin' with wriggle.